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Culture Lust is a blog about the latest ideas stirring in the creative world, hosted by Angela Carone. As arts and culture producer for KPBS Radio's These Days, she's constantly reading, watching, hearing and evaluating the books, movies, music, articles, performers, plays, and cultural phenomena that cross her desk.
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Culture Lust Talks Oscars…for Three Hours!!!!
That's right, I've decided to live blog the 80th Annual Academy Awards. We know it's the 80th because they've been telling us on the red carpet for the last hour!
By the way, I watched the Independent Spirit Awards this morning (rebroadcast on IFC) and it was soooooo good. I'm hoping the Oscars is close to it in quality and entertainment, but I highly doubt it. I must have updated my Netflix list 20 times during the show.
On to the red carpet.....
5:03 p.m. - George Clooney just invited Regis Philbin to Italy. I'm guessing Joan Rivers never got that invite.
5:10 p.m. - Regis is now talking to Miley Cyrus. Who???? Exactly, no idea. It turns out she's Disney famous. She's Hannah Montana.
5:12 p.m. - Faye Dunaway scares me.
5:14 p.m. - Helen Mirren is so amazing. She looks fantastic, claiming that her red gown is inspired by her latest role as a brothel madam. She also said she's excited to present the Best Actor award, and then mentioned that there aren't as many good roles out there for women. I think Helen Mirren should run for president.
5:17 p.m. - Daniel Day Lewis and Rebecca Miller on the carpet. Rebecca Miller is one of the most talented writers in Hollywood and because of that she can be as kooky as she wants - and let me tell you, she's wearing the kookiest dress I've seen tonight. But you know what? Let's just praise kooky for a minute. The Oscars has become so earnest and tasteful. Where's Cher, and Bjork, and that Native American woman who stood in for Marlon Brando? Here's to Rebecca Miller and her kooky dress! Hopefully, Julian Schnabel will wear his fancy pajamas.
5:26 p.m. - I'm nervous for Jon Stewart.
Why Actors Should Boycott An Oscar Ceremony
Filed under: Film
David Carr takes a good look at the rocky future of the Oscar ceremony today in The New York Times. The striking writers are in a real pickle. To actually picket the ceremony and deny televised honors to their actor and director friends could create some resentment amongst those who are sympathetic to the writers' cause.
Carr writes of the importance of the Oscar in Hollywood:
The prize is so dear precisely because it is so rare. Year in, year out, there is only one best actor, one best actress and one best picture, with a voting process that does not respond to easy manipulation. In a business populated by ego-afflicted souls who pursue glory and endure failure in the public eye, most would crawl on bloody stumps across a field of broken glass to get their mitts on an Oscar. It is a way to write the first line of one's obituary and put a zero or two behind your fees, all in one short walk to the stage.
Crawl on bloody stumps across broken glass? Kind of a harsh, but he's right, the Oscar still holds the bulk of the industry's prestige. And for that very reason, actors and directors should boycott a televised Oscar ceremony in support of the Writers' Guild.
I enjoy watching the Oscars for many reasons. I support the celebration, televised or otherwise, of the filmmaking craft - actors, directors, editors, etc. And, I'll admit, I like to look at the clothes - though I miss the days of Cher, Diane Keaton, and Bjork. The fashion is all so staid now.
But the fact is, the actors et al could still receive their awards and the acclaim that comes with them, while showing solidarity with their writer colleagues. Daniel Day-Lewis, who could probably give a hoot if he's on TV, can still win best actor and still have it announced in the trailer of every movie he's in for the next 20 years. By boycotting the televised ceremony, he jeopardizes none of that but still shows solidarity with the writers, who I might add, include his talented wife, Rebecca Miller.
I have a hard time feeling sympathy for celebrities whose biggest sacrifice is not getting to accept their awards on television or wear a designer dress for an evening. There are so many awards ceremonies now, all very similar, and they often include the same guests, recipients and presenters.
It's a small portion of the working actor who is celebrated at this level. It seems to me this celebrated few can take one for the team and forego this year's televised ceremony. Boycott it. Refuse to wear the dress, the diamonds or the tux. Save your speech - or publish it on the internet. Use the media currently under contention and YouTube your acceptance speech. Find creative ways to serve your needs and stay true to the cause of the writers. Make the great machinery of the Hollywood studios work harder to reach a reasonable compromise with the talent the makes it hum.
